In 2006, Republican cyber
security expert Stephen
Spoonamore was interviewed
by a major news outlet and he
blasted Diebold voting
machines and the stealing of
elections. The story was
killed but now you can see
that explosive interview
thanks to VelvetRevolution.

Open Letter to all Members of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives:

We, the undersigned non-partisan election integrity organizations, strongly urge you, as a first order
of business in the 110th Congress, to enact new federal legislation to protect the integrity of our
elections. While there are many areas of concern for any such legislation, none is more essential to
the accuracy of our elections and the confidence among our electorate than for there to be a paper
ballot for every vote cast. Not a paper "trail" or a paper "record," but a paper ballot.

That paper ballot must then actually be tabulated in order to determine the
initial results of the election.

In light of lessons learned during the 2006 primary and general elections -- with myriad contests
resulting in uncertainty and thousands of voters in state after state turned away from the polls
unable to cast a vote on DRE systems which failed throughout the day -- we now hold that a paper
ballot, whether counted by optical-scan system or hand, is the minimum requirement for any
Election Reform legislation in which voters may have confidence. Such a requirement is
needed to help ensure Americans that every legally registered voter can vote, that every
vote is recorded precisely as the voter intends, and that every vote is counted and, if
necessary, re-counted accurately.

This year's elections have made crystal clear that electronic voting machines -- both those
without paper ballots, such as Direct Recording Electronic (DRE) touch-screen systems, and
even those with so-called "Voter Verified Paper Audit Trails" -- caused massive disruptions,
undermined the results of crucial elections, and forced thousands of voters to leave the polls
without being able to exercise their franchise.

Paper trails and paper records are not sufficient to safeguard elections
and restore confidence among the electorate. Unless there is a paper ballot for every vote
cast, three fundamental principles of democratic elections are violated:

Observable tallies. It is impossible for citizens to observe the counting of electronic ballots and audit the results.

Equal access. Requiring voters to cast votes on computers discriminates against those who are not familiar with the technology.

Accurate results. It is impossible to ensure that the reported results are accurate. In fact, a voter-verifiable paper audit trail cannot be depended on to provide the certainty lacking in electronic tallies. Clear evidence from several recent elections reveals instances in which:

The electronic screen record did not reflect the voter's intent.

The electronic count did not match the paper trail produced by the e-voting machine.

The summary review screen did not match the paper trail produced by the e-voting machine.

Voters did not know to verify the paper trail or were prevented from doing so by improper design,
incorrect setup, or malfunction of the printer.

Computerized voting relinquished control of the final outcome to the technical skills of
those who programed the software.

While it is not easy to reconcile the money already spent on new DRE systems, it would be worse
to continue using election equipment that is not accomplishing its critical task. If this were a
public safety matter, no one would question the ban on the continued use of a dangerous product,
even if it had been funded by billions of public dollars. Why should we act any differently when
it comes to protecting the safety of our electoral process?

Ultimately, the true price of free, fair, reliable, accurate, and transparent elections
in America cannot be judged by dollars alone.

We therefore urge you to immediately enact legislation which requires a paper ballot for
every vote cast. Now is the moment for action, in time to take effect for the 2008
primaries and general election.